Seagoe
Parish Magazine.
A
P R IL , 1934.
SEAGOE
CHOIR , A u g u s t, 1 8 9 1 .
This
Photo was taken after the re-opening of the Church on August 7th,
1891
Back
Row from left 1, Chas Wilson ; 2. Mr. Wickham ; 3, Caroline McCully ;
4, Annie
Ferguson;
5, Hugh Bailey ; 5. Eva McCully ; 7, Tom Ferguson; 8, Martha Bailey;
9,
Mary Anne Montgomery ; 10. James Albin jun )
Second
Row from left 1. Sarah Anne Uprichard ; 2. Mary Jackson; Minnie
Kennedy;
4,
Minnie Lavery ; 5, Annie Sweeney ; 6 Eliza Killow (Australia) ; 7,
Hester Uprichard; 8, Hugh AI bin
Front
Row from left 1, Lizzie Rock; 2. Maggie Lavery; 3, Margretta Sweeny;
4,
T
H. Wilson Organist ; 5, Minnie Hughes ; 6, Fanny Walker; 7 Emma J. R
ock ;
8,
David W Rock
Boys
in front (left) Jack Bailey ; (right) Sam Rock.
The
above photograph is of great interest. It
was
taken by a Mr. Scott, photographer, of
Edward
Street, at 3 p.m. on Thursday, April
7th,
1891. The Service for the re-opening of
the
Church had just been held. It was a great
occasion
in the Parish. The offerings amounted
to
£103.
Many of those who were then members of the choir have passed away.
Some still
remain.
The photograph is an interesting memento of Mr. T. H. Wilson’s long
connection
with
Seagoe choir. Mr. Charles Wilson, who is
in
the photograph, on the left, was organist
of
Seagoe for a year, from 1873 to 1S74.
Easter,
1934.
From
the earliest times Christians all agreed
in
showing peculiar respect and honour to the
Festival
of Easter. One of the ancient Fathers
of
the Church calls it the Queen of Festivals, and
says
it excels all others as far as the Sun exceeds
the
other stars, it has been also called the
“
Sunday
of Joy .” One great expression of the
public
joy was given when the early Christian
Emperors
granted on this day a general release
of
prisoners. It was also customary in ancient
days
for private persons, to grant their slaves
freedom
at this season. In primitive times
the
Christians' saluted one another in the
SEAGOE
PARISH MAGAZINE
early
morning of Easter Day with the words,
“
Christ
is risen,” to which those who were
saluted
made answer “ Christ is risen indeed.”
This
year the Paschal moon has been shining
each
night from cloudless skies. We have
passed
through the dark shadows of Good Friday
and
now the bright light of Easter shines upon
us,
filling our hearts with the hope of a joyful
Resurrection.
Services
on Easter Day .
The
following Services will be held (D .V.) on
Easter
Day: —
8
a.m.— Holy Communion.
11.30
a.m.— Morning Prayer. Sermon and Holy
Communion.
7
p.m.'—Evening Prayer and Sermon.
The
offerings, at all the Services on Easter Day
will
be on behalf of our Parochial Sunday School
Fund.
There are seven afternoon and two morning Sunday Schools held in the
Parish each week.
A
most important and helpful work is done by
their
agency among the younger members of the
Church
in all parts of the Parish.
Confirmation
Classes
The
preparation classes for the approaching
Confirmation
will be held as follows :
Classes
for Boys will be held in Seagoe School
On
Thursdays, beginning on Thursday,
May
3rd, at 8 p.m.
Classes
for Girls will be held in Seagoe School
on
Tuesdays, beginning on Tuesday,
May
1st, at 8 p.m.
Classes
for Adults (over 21) will be held in the
Parish
Church on Sunday afternoon, at
4.30
p.m ., beginning on Sunday May 5th.
The
Lord Bishop, will .(D .V .) hold the Confirmation in the Parish
Church on Friday, June
22nd,
at 8 p.m. Candidates must be 14 years of
age
or over.
Presentation
.
The
choir of Seagoe have presented Mr. T. H .
Wilson
with a finely upholstered armchair to
mark
the completion of his sixtieth year as
organist
of Seagoe. The presentation was made
on.
Thursday, March 22nd. in Seagoe School. There
was a full attendance of the choir, and
Mr. and Mrs. Casey were
also present. The
Rector presided, and after tea games
followed.
During an interval the Rector presented the
chair to
Mr. Wilson and placed him in it. In
doing so he congratulated Mr.
Wilson on bis long
and efficient tenure of the post of organist,
and
expressed the hope that he might yet touch the
seventieth
year of service. A handsome handbag
was presented to Mrs. Wilson.
Mr. and Mrs.
Wilson expressed their sincere thanks for the
kind
gifts given by the choir. Others who spoke
CLERGY
:
Rev. Chancellor Archer, B.D., The Rectory,
Seagoe.
Rev.
W. F. Hayes, B.A., The Bungalow, Lower
Seagoe,
Portadown.
CHURCHWARDENS :
Rector’s—Mr. James
Twinem.
People’s—Mr. Wm. White.
were
Mr. Scott, Mr. Jack Walker, Mr. Maxwell,
Mr. Casey, and the Rev. W
. F. Hayes. A very
pleasant evening concluded with the singing
of
the Doxology.
Seagoe P .E S.
The School broke up for
the Easter, holidays
on Thursday, March 29th, at 3 p.m. The
Rector,
who is manager of the School, was present
and
congratulated the teachers and pupils on the
successful
term just completed. After a hymn
had been sung and prayer said,
the Rector asked
for cheers for the teachers, which were
heartily
given. A surprise item was the presentation to
Mr.
Scott, Miss Reid and Miss Matchett of three
splendid Easter eggs
in boxes. They
handed to the teachers by three of the.
senior
girls. Mr. Scott thanked the. children on behalf
of the
staff for their very kind gifts. The School
will resume work (D
.V.) on Monday, April 9th, [
at 9.15 a.m. sharp.
T h e E a
s te r V e s try .
The annual meeting of the General Vestry of
the
Parish will he held on Thursday, April 5th.
in Seagoe School, at 8
p.m. A meeting of' the
Select Vestry will be held at 7.30 p.m. At
the
annual Easter Vestry the Churchwardens for the
ensuing year
are nominated and elected and also
the Select Vestry and Sidesmen.
A punctual
attendance of the members of the General Vestry
is
requested.
Our Losses-
We announce with regret this month
the loss
by death of some from among us who were well
known and
highly esteemed. Miss Sarah Jane Gilchrist, although resident in the
Parish
for
many years, had been in weak health for some
time hut her last
illness was of short duration.
We sympathise very sincerely with
her sister in
her sad bereavement. Mrs. Agnes McKeown of
Bridge
St., was known to very many,
passed away after a long illness. She
had suffered a crushing blow in the death some years
ago of her
husband and her only child. Mrs.
Elizabeth Harrison, of Levaghery,
endured with
much patience many weeks of suffering's ;She
was a
loving wife and devoted mother, and
loss is deeply felt. At this
Easter season the
message comes to us from the Lord of Life
and
Death— “ I am the Resurrection and the Life”
The
Guest Tea
On Thursday, March 8th, a Guest Tea was
held in
Seagoe School. The guests began to assemble at 7.30. The hosts who
were the Superintendents and Teachers in our Sunday Schools,
had
prepared the tables, and everything was very
nice. Mr. Norman
Walker, who teaches in Seagoe Afternoon/Sunday School, presented
some
beautiful flowers for the tables. A very large
number of
people were present and arrangements
were made for overflow
tables, several of which
were brought into use. Grace was sung
before
tea. A very sociable spirit prevailed, and everyone talked
to everybody else. Just as it should
be. After tea a most
attractive programme of
music, recitations and sketches was given
by
many kind helpers. Every item was good and
encores were the
order of the evening. A very
ammusing sketch was given by Lieut.
E. Mitchell
and Staff-Sergeant Joe Hynes, of the C.L.B. It
was
entitled “ Waiting.” Some of the young
reciters were very
good. At the close the Rector
thanked all who had so kindly helped
to make
the evening such a success. A plate was left on
each
table for gifts towards the object of the
entertainment. As will
be seen by the appended
account of the receipts a large sum was
subscribed. The proceeds were in aid of the Sunday
School
Excursion Fund of 1933, on which there
was a deficit of over £9.
A handsome balance
remains over after paying the deficit. Mr.
Scott
act-d as Hon. Sec., and Mr. M ‘Clements as
Hon.
Treas.
Proceeds from Guest Tea, 8th March, 1934: —
Tables—Miss
Halliday, £3 3s; Miss Atkinson,
£2 10s 6d; Miss Guy, £2 2s 6d;
Miss M. Dickson and Miss M. Gracey, £1 17s Od; Mrs. Scott,
31 5s
6d; Miss Price, £1 2s ; Mrs. Jas. Twinem,
£1 Is Id.
Subscriptions— Mr. Magennis, per
Hacknahay S.S., £1; Mr.
Stanfield, per Levaghery S.S., 10s;- Mrs. Abraham, 2s 6d;
Miss
Lavery, 2s; Miss Monroe, 2s 6d; Mrs. Mayes,
2s 6d ;
Mrs. 'McDowell, 2s. 6d; Sale of pastry,
7s 6d. Total— £15 11s
Id. Expenses— Messrs.
Davison, £8 10s; Mrs. Porter, 5s. Nett
balance
£6 16s Id,
Seagoe in the States .
A Seagoe
woman takes her first trip in an
aeroplane at the age of 87
years.
Some of our older readers will, perhaps, remember Miss
Margaret Costello,. of Carne, but
It is very many years since she
and her husband,
Mr. Hugh Ruddy, went abroad, first to Canada,
and
then to the States. A niece of hers,
Mrs. Abie Morrow, of .
Ballyworkan, sends
the enclosed . cuttings from “ The
Mankato
Free.Press, an American paper, relating the
courageous
adventure of Mrs. Ruddy when she
made her first ride in an
aeroplane at the age of
87. Mr, Ruddy is a sister of our
respected
parishioner, Mr. Andrew Costello, of Tamnifiglasson. A
snapshot of Mrs. Ruddy, with her
son and the pilot of the plane,
standing beside
the machine is printed in the newspaper.
Despite
her 87 years, Mrs. Hugh Ruddy,
Sr.. Lamberton, mother of Hugh
Ruddy, of
Mankato, received a genuine ‘ wallop’ out of
an
airplane ride here Saturday.
For a number of years Mrs.
Ruddy has been
planning to take an air trip. So when she arrived
here for a short visit her son took her to
the airport and
together they enjoyed an observation flight over the city with L. J.
Sohler,
Mankato pilot.
I had ridden in everv kind of
conveyance
but
an airplane, including the Irish side-car
drawn by a donkey in
Portadown, Ireland, and
the ox cart in America. But the airplane
is the
easiest of all, ’ she said.
As they rode over the
city Mrs. Ruddy
pointed to buildings, identifying them. She
recognized the Heinrich hotel of which her son is
proprietor, and
other buildings.
Her only regret was that her husband
could
not have taken the trip with her. He has been
in failing
health for some time. Mr. and Mrs.
Ruddy celebrated their
sixty-fourth wedding anniversary April 27th
Parish
Register for March -
Baptism .
McAlister—March 3rd, 1934,
Vera, daughter of
David Frederick and Sarah McAlister, of
Drumlisnagrilly.
Burials .
Gilchrist— March 21st, Sarah
Jane Gilchrist, of Edenderry, aged 61 years.
McKeown— March
22nd, Agnes McKeown, of Edenderry, aged 73 years. Interred at
Blaris
Graveyard, Lisburn.
Harrison—March 25th, Elizabeth Harrison, of
Levagherv, aged 64 years.
C .L .B . Parade.
A largely
attended Praise Service was held
in the Parish Church on Sunday
evening, Feb.
25th, at 7 p.m. An interesting feature of
the
Service was the formal admission of the Cadets
and Training
Corps to full membership and the
handing of certificates to the
officers and non
commissioned
officers of the Seagoe Company.
Each lad received his card of
membership. The
Rector preached. The Company, when marching to and
from the Church, was headed by the
Seagoe C .L .B . Pipe Band. .
The summer C.L.B .
camp this year will be held at
Morecambe.
SEAGOE PARISH MAGAZINE
In Memoriam.
The
distribution of gifts from the Alan Bell
Memorial Fund was made in
the week before
Easter. Thirty-one gifts were made. The
amount
available this year was less than usual
owing to the reduction in
the rate of interest allowed by the Government. In future the
sum
available will be only £17 10s instead of the £25
hitherto
distributed. It was Mrs. Bell’s expressed wish that the gifts
should be given as
far as possible to those who showed an
interest
in the work of the Church and attended the Services in
the Parish Church.
Our Summer Migrants.
Summer time begins
on April 22nd. Our summer migrants— the swallow, the cuckoo, and
the
, corncrake will be with us once again in a short
time. We
will be glad to publish in our next
issue the names, with date, of
those who first see .
or hear them in the Parish.
Death of
Mr . Ruddy , U. S. A ■
(Taken from the Lamberton, (Minn.) News
of I
December 28, .1933.)
HUGH BUDDY, 87, DIES
TUESDAY.
Hugh Buddy died Tuesday, shortly after the
noon hour,
following a lingering illness of some
15 years. For the past 18
months he has been
bed-ridden..
Mr. Buddy was born April
16, 1846, and would
have been 88 years old this April. He was
married to Margaret Costello on April 27, 1870, in
the parish
church of Seagoe, Ireland, by Rev. :
James Saurin.
They
emigrated from Ireland to Milton, Ontario, Canada. Five sons were
born to this union
in Canada. They are: W . J. Buddy, J. E.
Buddy,
Hugh Buddy Andrew C. Buddy. Atkinson C. Buddy died 11 years ago. One
son,
Joseph A. Buddy, and one daughter, Mrs. Wilbur Evans, were
born in Illinois. Besides the 1
six children, he is survived by
his wife, together
with 21 grandchildren and 5
great-grandchildren.
The Buddys came to this community in
1895
and first lived on the old Kelly farm. They have
lived on
the present farm for the past 25 years.
The “ .News” joins
the community in extending sympathy to those bereaved.
(January
4, 1934).
RITES FOR HUGH BUDDY CONDUCTED
HERE
THURSDAY.
Mr. Buddy is survived by six children and his
wife.
The children are: Mrs. Wilbur Evans,
Lamberton; W . J. Buddy,
Willmar; J. E.
Buddy, White; S. D. ; Hugh .Ruddy, Mankato;
Joseph
A. Ruddy, Hammond, Ind., and Andrew
Ruddy, Wessington, S. D. One
son, Atkinson
C. Ruddy, died at Estelline, S. D., 11 years ago,
at
the age of 44 years. Those from a distance in attendance at
the
funeral were: Mr. and Mrs. A. D. McRae, Mr.
and Mrs. Harry
Beaty, of Redwood Falls; Mrs.
Jule Puck and son, Loraine, Mrs.
Frank Kaiser,
Mrs. Paul Callaghan of Mankato : Mr. and Mrs.
Harold
Conrad of Springfield; John Kagel of
Clements; Mr. and Mrs. .Geo.
Smith of Willmar
and. Eleanor Bertrand of Cobden.
In
Affectionate Remembrance of
HUGH RUDDY.
Oh, Lord; the
treasure of our soul
Has fled at Thy command,
To sing Thy
praise with angels
In Canaan’s happy land.
A vacant place
there now is left
In our family circle here,
That never
will be filled again
By one we love more dear.
But it
gives us consolation
To know his pain is o’er,
And gone
to sing hosannas
With Thee for evermore.
— Requested by
Mrs. Hugh Ruddy.
Old Seagoe Notes .
The Kirk Family in
Seagoe Parish.—The following interesting particulars regarding the
Kirk
family in Seagoe Parish have been sent to the
Rector by
the Rev. H . Cunningham Farwell, of
Salem, Massachusetts, U.S.A. :
—
Dinah Kirk Pedigree checked by the Friends’
Recórds
of “ Dublin Monthly Meeting.”—
Robert, a cooper, and
Elizabeth Kirk dwelt in
Neshag in ye parish of Skelton and in the
county
of York, England. He came to Ireland with five
children
in 1658, since when he hath dwelt in
Tollygallv, near Lurgan. Five
children were
born in England and two in Ireland. Christian,
b.
Oct, 21, 1645; Deborah, b. Mar. 27, 1650;
Timothy, b. March 27,
1652; Roger, b. Feb. 20
1654; Dinah, b. Oct. 14, 1656; Alphonsus,
b.
May 14, 1659; Robert, b. Jan. 28, 1607. Robert
Kirk, b. 28
Jan., 1667, of Tollygally; m. Ann
Hallidav; marriage intention
declared 25 Feb.
1696. Robert Kirb, b 25 Feb., 1701; m.
Jane
Valentine; children: David, William, Christy.
Jacob,.,
Robert, Dinah, Mary, . Nancy, and
Rachael. Dinah Kirk, b in 1759;
m. John Cunningham (as above).
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